Abstract

Purpose

To evaluate and quantify in diabetic patients treated with benfluorex in France, a fenfluramine-derivated product, a possible increase in risk of valvular heart disease, previously suggested by several published case reports.

Methods

This was a French comparative cohort study using data from two large national linked databases, health insurance system (SNIIRAM) and hospitalization (PMSI). Patients aged 40–69 years with reimbursement for oral antidiabetic and/or insulin in 2006 were eligible. Exposed patients were defined as patients with at least one benfluorex reimbursement in 2006. Selected admission diagnoses of interest in 2007 and 2008 PMSI databases were valvular insufficiency for any cause, mitral insufficiency, aortic insufficiency, and valvular replacement surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass. Relative risks (RR) were adjusted on gender, age, and history of chronic cardiovascular disease.

Results

A total of 1 048 173 diabetic patients were included, with 43 044 (4.1%) exposed to benfluorex. The risk of hospitalization in 2007 and 2008 for any cardiac valvular insufficiency was higher in the benfluorex group: crude RR = 2.9 [95% confidence interval 2.2–3.7] and adjusted RR = 3.1 [2.4–4.0], with a lower risk for patients with lower cumulative dose of benfluorex. Adjusted RR for mitral insufficiency and aortic insufficiency admissions were 2.5 [1.9–3.7] and 4.4 [3.0–6.6], respectively. Adjusted RR for valvular replacement surgery was 3.9 [2.6–6.1].

10Diogo Mendes, Carlos Alves, Francisco Batel Marques, Testing the usefulness of the number needed to treat to be harmed (NNTH) in benefit-risk evaluations: case study with medicines withdrawn from the European market due to safety reasons, Expert Opinion on Drug Safety, 2016, 15, 10, 1301CrossRef